Interagency Border Inspection System

The Interagency Border Inspection System (IBIS) is a United States computer-based system that provides the law enforcement community with files of common interest. IBIS provides access to the Federal Bureau of Investigation National Crime Information Center (NCIC) and allows its users to interface with all 50 U.S. states via the National Law Enforcement Telecommunications System (NLETS). IBIS physically resides on the Treasury Enforcement Communications System (TECS) at the U.S. Customs and Border Protection Data Center.

Regulatory and law enforcement personnel from more than 20 federal agencies or bureaus use IBIS, including:

Field access is provided by a network with more than 24,000 IBIS terminals, located at ports of entry including border checkpoints, seaports, and airports to track information on suspect individuals, businesses, vehicles, aircraft, and watercraft. IBIS terminals can also be used to access records on wanted persons, stolen vehicles, vessels or firearms, license information, criminal histories, and previous federal inspections, allowing the border enforcement agencies to focus their limited resources on those potential non-compliant travelers.[1]

Notes

gollark: Although I'm not sure if it's an FCC thing.
gollark: These "child protection" laws always seem to have been horrible and poorly implemented.
gollark: I haven't heard of them doing any terribly bad things, although the whole thing of selling off bits of electromagnetic spectrum is... somewhat weird.
gollark: Then Linuxed the backend GB array.
gollark: They should obviously have virtualized the BIOS proxy to divert all IPs to the USB wireless field.
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